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Alphege Masculine History

Alphege is the Middle English form of the Old English name Ælfheah. The name Ælfheah is derived from the elements ælf 'elf' and heah 'high', thus meaning 'elf-high' or 'high elf'.Historical SignificanceAlphege is best kn...

Artaxerxes Masculine English Bible Ancient Persian +1

Artaxerxes is a name of great historical significance, derived from the Greek adaptation of the Old Persian name 𐎠𐎼𐎫𐎧𐏁𐏂𐎠 (Artaxšaça), meaning "reign through truth". This name is composed of the elements arta ("truth") an...

Attila Masculine Turkish Hungarian +1

Attila is a masculine name of uncertain etymology, best known as the name of a 5th-century leader of the Huns. It probably originates from the Gothic element atta meaning "father," combined with a diminutive suffix, givi...

Aurelian Masculine Romanian History

Aurelian is the Romanian form of the Roman cognomen Aurelianus, and also serves as the standard English designation for the Roman emperor who reigned from 270 to 275 AD. The name ultimately derives from the Roman family...

Averroes Masculine History

Averroes is the Latinized form of the Arabic patronymic ibn Rushd (ابن رشد), used to refer to the Islamic philosopher and scientist Abu l-Walid Muhammad ibn Ahmad ibn Rushd (1126–1198), who was born in Córdoba, Spain. Hi...

Avicenna Masculine History

Avicenna is the Latinized form of the Arabic patronymic ابن سينا (ibn Sīnā), referring to the famed Arabic-speaking Persian philosopher and physician Abu Ali al-Husayn ibn Abdullah ibn al-Hasan ibn Ali ibn Sina (980-1037...

Bademus Masculine History

Bademus is a Latinized form of a Persian name of unknown meaning. It is most famously borne by a 4th-century Persian martyr, Saint Bademus (also known as Bademe and Vadim), who was a victim of the persecutions under King...

Bashō Masculine History

Bashō is the Japanese pen name (haigō) of Matsuo Bashō (1644–1694), the most celebrated haiku poet of the Edo period. The name literally means "Japanese banana tree" and refers to Musa basjoo, a species of banana plant w...

Bede Masculine History

Bede is a modern form of the Old English name Baeda, possibly related to Old English bed meaning "prayer". The name is inextricably linked with Saint Bede, known as the Venerable Bede, an 8th-century monk, scholar, and h...

Bleda Masculine History

Bleda was a Hunnic ruler, the brother of Attila. While Attila became the more famous figure, Bleda initially co-ruled the Hunnic Empire with his brother after succeeding their uncle Rugila in the mid-5th century. His rei...

Bonaventure Masculine French History

Bonaventure is a French and English form of Bonaventura. As a French name, it is most common in Francophone Africa, while in English it is primarily used in reference to the saintEtymologyThe Italian name Bonaventura mea...

Caedmon Masculine History

Etymology and Historical ContextCaedmon (or Cædmon) is a name of uncertain meaning, though the first element is likely connected to British Celtic kad meaning "battle," linking it to the root Cadmus and related names suc...

Cajetan Masculine History

Cajetan is the English form of the Late Roman name Caietanus, which itself derives from the Italian Gaetano. Ultimately, the name traces back to the Latin Caietanus, meaning "from Caieta" (modern Gaeta), a town in ancien...

Caligula Masculine History

Caligula is the anglicized form of the Latin nickname "little boot" given to the 1st-century Roman emperor Gaius Julius Caesar Augustus Germanicus. The name originated from the miniature military boots (caligae) he wore...

Cambyses Masculine Ancient Persian History

Cambyses is the Latin form of the Greek name Kambyses (Καμβύσης), which in turn derives from the Old Persian name Kabujiya (𐎣𐎲𐎢𐎪𐎡𐎹). The exact meaning of Kabujiya remains uncertain, though it has been speculatively linke...

Canute Masculine History

Canute is the Anglicized form of Knut, derived from the Old Norse knútr meaning "knot." The name is most famously associated with Cnut the Great, a Danish prince who became king of England, Denmark, and Norway in the 11t...

Chagatai Masculine History

EtymologyChagatai is the usual English spelling of the Turkish name Çağatay, which itself derives from the Medieval Mongolian name Tsagadai. The Mongolian origin is uncertain, but one theory connects it to the word chaga...

Charlemagne Masculine History

Charlemagne is the name by which the Frankish king Charles the Great (742–814) is commonly known. Derived from Old French Charles le Magne meaning "Charles the Great," it is not a given name in its own right but a histor...

Chobin Masculine History

Chobin is a historical Persian male name, best known as the epithet of the Sasanian military leader and briefly reigning king, Bahram Chobin. The name derives from the Middle Persian word Čoben, meaning "spear-like," ref...

Chrysostom Masculine History

Chrysostom is the English form of the Greek name Chrysostomos, which combines chrysos meaning "gold" and stoma meaning "mouth" to mean "golden mouth." This epithet originally denoted exceptional eloquence, akin to a "gol...

Clovis Masculine French History

Clovis is the modern conventional French (and thence English) form of the Old Frankish name *Hlōdowig, which is also the source of the French name Louis, the German Ludwig, and other variants such as the Dutch Lodewijk a...

Cnut Masculine History

Cnut (kə-NYOOT; Old Norse: Knútr) is a historic name best known as a variant of Knut, derived from Old Norse knútr meaning "knot." The name is indelibly associated with Cnut the Great, a Danish prince who forged a vast N...

Confucius Masculine History

Confucius is the anglicized form of the Chinese name Kong Fuzi. The surname 孔 (Kong) means "hole, opening" and the title 夫子 (Fuzi) means "master". This name designates a 6th-century BC Chinese philosopher whose given...

Constantine 1 Masculine History

Constantine 1, commonly known as Constantine the Great, was a Roman emperor who reigned from 306 to 337 AD. His full name was Flavius Valerius Constantinus, and he is celebrated for being the first Roman emperor to conve...

Cyprian Masculine Polish History

Cyprian is a masculine given name derived from the Roman family name Cyprianus, meaning "from Cyprus." The name is most famously associated with Saint Cyprian, a 3rd-century bishop of Carthage who was martyred under the...

Diadumenian Masculine History

Diadumenian was a Roman emperor whose brief reign in 218 AD marked one of the many turbulent transitions of the 3rd-century Crisis. Born Marcus Opellius Antoninus Diadumenianus on 14 September 208, he was the son of Macr...

Diocletian Masculine History

Diocletian is the Latinized name of the Roman emperor Gaius Aurelius Valerius Diocletianus, who ruled from 284 to 305 CE. The name is derived from the Roman cognomen Diocletianus, itself a derivative of Diokles, a Greek...

Domitian Masculine History

Domitian is a historical masculine given name, derived from the Roman cognomen Domitianus, itself a derivative of the family name Domitius. The root name Domitius is likely derived from Latin domitus, meaning "having bee...

Dracula Masculine History Literature

Dracula is a Romanian masculine given name and historical nickname meaning "son of Dracul," from the Romanian drac meaning "dragon." The most famous bearer was Vlad III Drăculea (also known as Vlad Țepeș or Vlad the Impa...

Ephrem Masculine History

Ephrem is a masculine given name, a variant spelling of Ephraim. The name ultimately derives from the Hebrew ʾEfrayim, meaning "fruitful". In the Old Testament, Ephraim was a son of Joseph and Asenath and the founder of...

Faramond Masculine History

Faramond is a variant of the legendary Frankish name Faramund, also recorded as Pharamond. According to the 8th-century Liber Historiae Francorum, Pharamond (or Faramund) was the first king of the Franks, chosen after th...

Ferdowsi Masculine History

Ferdowsi is the pen name of Abolqasem Mansour bin Hassan Tusi (940–1025), one of the most celebrated figures in Persian literature. The name is a Persian byname derived from the Arabic word firdaws (meaning "paradise"),...

Firdausi Masculine History

Firdausi is a variant of the name Ferdowsi, a Persian byname meaning "paradisiacal" or "heavenly." The name is derived from Arabic firdaws (paradise), which itself has Iranian origins. While less common than Ferdowsi, Fi...

Flavian Masculine History

Flavian is a masculine given name of Roman origin. It derives from the Latin family name Flavianus, which itself is derived from the Roman nomen Flavius. Flavius, meaning "golden" or "yellow-haired" from the Latin flavus...

Florian Masculine French German +3

Florian is a masculine given name derived from the ancient Roman name Florianus. The name originates from the Latin flōrus meaning "yellow, blond" or, by later association, "flowering" (from flos, "flower"). The Roman co...

Gall Masculine History

Gall is a masculine name used in historical contexts, primarily referring to a 7th-century Irish saint. The name is a form of the Roman cognomen Gallus, which derives from the Latin word for 'rooster' or can denote a per...

Genghis Masculine History

Genghis is a title, not a given name in the traditional sense, but it has become a powerful personal name in its own right, primarily in the form of Genghis Khan. The name is derived from the title Genghis (or Chinggis)...

Geronimo Masculine History

Geronimo is the better-known name of the Apache leader Goyaałé (1829–1909), deriving from the Spanish form Gerónimo, which itself comes from the Greek name Hieronymos, meaning "sacred name" (from Greek hieros "sacred" an...

Goemon Masculine History

Goemon is the rōmaji transcription of the Japanese name ごえもん, associated with the semi-legendary figure Ishikawa Goemon, an iconic outlaw in Japanese folklore. The name is composed of the kanji 五 (go) meaning "five"...

Gordian Masculine History

Gordian is the English form of the Roman cognomen Gordianus, derived from the ancient city of Gordium, the capital of Phrygia in Asia Minor (modern-day Yassıhüyük, Turkey). The name literally means "from Gordium" and is...

Gratian Masculine History

Gratian is a historical name derived from the Roman family name Gratianus, itself rooted in the Latin word gratus meaning "grateful". The name was borne by several significant figures in late antiquity, most notably the...

Hadrian Masculine History

Etymology Hadrian is the English form of the Roman cognomen Hadrianus, which literally meant "from Hadria" in Latin. Hadria was the name of two Roman settlements: one in northern Italy (modern Adria), an important Etrusc...

Hamilcar Masculine Phoenician History

Hamilcar is a masculine given name of Phoenician origin, borne by several notable figures in ancient Carthage. The name derives from the Punic elements meaning "brother of Melqart" or, alternatively, "Melqart is gracious...

Hammurabi Masculine History

Hammurabi (also spelled Hammu-Rapi) is an ancient Babylonian first name, derived from Akkadian Hammu-rapi, which likely originates from the Amorite language. Various interpretations of the name's meaning have been sugges...

Hannibal Masculine Phoenician History

Hannibal is a Punic name most famously borne by the Carthaginian general who challenged the Roman Republic during the Second Punic War. The name derives from the Phoenician elements ḥann meaning "grace, favour" and the n...

Harthacnut Masculine History

Harthacnut (c. 1018 – 8 June 1042) was a king of Denmark (1035–1042) and England (1040–1042), the last ruler of the House of Knýtlinga and the final North Sea Empire monarch. His name derives from the Old Norse byname Ha...

Hasdrubal Masculine Phoenician History

Etymology and MeaningHasdrubal is the Latinized form of the Carthaginian name ʿAzrubaʿal, which in Punic script is written 𐤏𐤆𐤓𐤁𐤏𐤋. The name means "Ba'al helps," derived from the Phoenician verb ʿazru meaning "to help" an...

Helerius Masculine History

Helerius is the Latin form of the masculine name Helier. The name appears in historical records as the Latinized version of a sixth-century hermit and martyr, Saint Helier, the patron saint of Jersey in the Channel Islan...

Helier Masculine History

Helier is the name of the patron saint of the island of Jersey, a 6th-century ascetic hermit whose historical and legendary persona has shaped the identity of the island. The meaning of the name is uncertain; it was reco...

Hiawatha Masculine Iroquois History

Hiawatha (HY-ə-WOTH-ə, also US: -WAW-thə; Onondaga: Haiëñ'wa'tha [hajẽʔwaʔtha]), also known as Ayenwatha or Aiionwatha, was a precolonial Native American leader and cofounder of the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) Confederacy....

Hokusai Masculine History

Hokusai (北斎) is a Japanese name adopted as a profession name by the iconic ukiyo-e artist Katsushika Hokusai (1760–1849). The name is composed of elements hoku (北) meaning "north" and sai (斎) meaning "purification" o...

Huldrych Masculine History

Huldrych is a Latinized variant of the German name Ulrich, primarily associated with the Swiss church reformer Huldrych Zwingli (1484–1531). While his birth name was Ulrich, he later adopted the spelling Huldrychus, like...

Innocent Masculine English History

EtymologyInnocent is derived from the Late Latin name Innocentius, itself stemming from the Latin word innocens meaning "innocent" or "harmless." The name thus directly conveys the quality of being free from guilt or wro...

Irnerius Masculine History

Irnerius (c. 1050 – after 1125) was a renowned Italian jurist and the founder of the School of Glossators, which revived the study of Roman law in medieval Europe. His name is thought to derive from Wernerius, the Latini...

Ives Masculine History

Ives is an English form of Yves, used to refer to Saint Ives (also called Ivo) of Huntingdonshire, a semi-legendary English bishop. The name ultimately derives from the Germanic element iwa meaning "yew," which was often...

Josephus Masculine Dutch History

Josephus is a Latin form of Joseph. As a Dutch name, it is used on birth certificates, though a vernacular form such as Jozef is typically used in daily life. In English, it is used primarily to refer to the 1st-century...

Justinian Masculine History

Justinian is a historical name borne most famously by the Byzantine emperor Justinian I, also known as Justinian the Great (482–565). The name derives from the Latin Iustinianus, a derivative of Iustinus, which itself ul...

Juvenal Masculine Portuguese History

Juvenal is the English and Portuguese form of the Roman cognomen Iuvenalis, a Latin name meaning "youthful". As a historical given name, it is primarily associated with the ancient Roman poet Decimus Junius Juvenalis, kn...

Kentigern Masculine History

Kentigern is the Latinized form of a Brythonic name borne by a 6th-century missionary and saint from the Kingdom of Strathclyde. The name is derived from Proto-Celtic elements: the second part *tigernos means "lord" or "...

Kublai Masculine History

Kublai is the popular Western form of the Mongolian name Khubilai, whose original meaning remains uncertain. It is most famously borne by Kublai Khan (1215–1294), a grandson of Genghis Khan and the fifth khagan (supreme...

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